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THE UNION-RECORDER, MILLEDGEVIIXE. CA-, MAT U 1*30
mat MINDED SCHOOL TO
HAVE OUTLAY AT STATE
HOSPITAL
Twntjr You., Wom»n Tr.imW kg
Miu M.r, Boon., WiU 3Row
Work to Pcbhc
FARMERS CLUB MET SATURDAY
WITH MR. FRANK RILEY
Appoisl Con
I, Commiu
Bartec i
Dii
i to Request Co
for Farm A gen
DR. GROVER C. JONES
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
MACON, GA.
PHONE 1570
The Farmers Club of Baldwin
*77 T , ,, county met with .Mr. Frank Riley
Th. .ccomplUhm.nt, of M™ jW.ry Saturi||iy The wu h , Id un .
tier beautiful shade trees near the
", fish pond, and several hours spent
nost pleasantly.
•Mr. H. G. Banks was elected a
. .... . . member of the club to succeed the
opened to th. public for inaction. hte Co , ^ £ PoUlc
In 1913 the chool was established
.end the first effort was madi
Bonner in her effort to train the
feeble minded young girl* at the Mil- j
ledgevillc State Hospital will
ahown Wednesday and Thursday of
this week when the school will be
‘Georgia to do something for those
whoH‘ minds were inferior and would
never develop. Out of this effort
has grown the hospital at Grace-
wood.
The display will included clothing,
pillow rases and towels that the
twenty girls have made. Miss Bon
ner with her assKtant Miss Anna
Philo Pendleton .las taught the
children to do this work with their
fingers in a mechanical fashion.
The public has been invited to see
this work.
W. C. T. U. NOTES
Our local W. C. T. U. is sponsor
ing a contest on essays on prohibition,
•both at C,. M. C. and G. S. C. W. in
the high schools and *a1so in the
grades; prises of $10.00 and $5.00
have been offered; -ume of the rural
schools are competing.
The women of our local Union pro
vided roses, both white and red. for
the boys at G. M. C. on Mothers’
Day. Mrs. Roach, president, pre
sented them to the boys, with words
cf greeting from the Union.
The Union Signal, National W. C.
T. r. organ carrier or. its cover
pipe for May 17. a very striking and
aigni 'icant picture. In the forefront
is a 1 gurc of the woman, represent
ing the American women standing
with folded arms, gazing steadfastly
ahead, at a group of men, carrying
barrels and bottles, labeled “Liquor
and Co. Expert Home Wreckers”
while behind the woman, which she
seems to be protecting, is a large
group of houses, representing the
homes of America. The words issu
ing from the woman's lips are; “They
Shall Not Pass".
Below the picture ace these words.
“As long as the Nineteenth Amend
ment stands, the Eighteenth Amend
ment will stand also/'
A committee, composed of Messrs.
Geo. W. Hollinshc»d, F. C. Penuel,
J. A. Horne and Dr. H. D. Allen, was
appointed tc draft resolutions to the
County Commissioners, requesting the
employment of a lartn agent for the
county.
Mr. and Mr-. Riley spre: a sump-
tious feast consisting of barbecue,
salads, cukes, lemonade, etc. Besides
the member* of the club they had
several friends oa guests.
The June meeting of the club will
be held at the home of Mr. C. R. Tor-
BOSTON fAFF
—WHERE EVERYBODY EATS—
“Fr««h Eff* S«md Daily”
FRESH NORFOLK OYSTERS
AND WESTERN SIEAK DAILY
The Ladies Home Journal for May
has an cditroinl entitled “Less
Drinking In School” and reading as
follow’s. “Three •enfinent Michigan
educators, conducting an investiga
tion among high-school students in
the city of Detroit, have found that
drinking is less of a problem now
than in 1917, that fewer pupils are
using alcoholic drinks, that there arc
fewer cases of drinking on school
property and fewer cases of truancy.
They found also that among the
THIS WEEK IN HISTORY
May 19—Confederation of New Eng
land Colonies, 1743; Treaty be
tween United States and Mexico,
1848; “Dark Day" in New England,
1780; Explosion in coal mine at
Mather, Pa., killed 197 miner.-,
11*28; John Gottlieb Fichte bom,
1762.
May 20—Homestead act approved,
1806; Lindbergh left New York for
Paris, 1927; John Stuart Mill boro,
I80C.
May 21—House of Represcntativee
votes Panama Canal free of toll to
American coastwise vessels, 1912;
Lindbergh arrived in Paris, 1927;
Aldbergh Durer bom, 1471.
May 22—Burr tried for treason,
1794; Kunsns-Nebraska bill pass
ed, 1864; Wilkelm Richard Wagner
born 1813.
May 23—Second Virginia charter
granted, 1609; McKinley Tariff
bill introduced in Congress, 1890;
luily declured war on Austria,
1915; Earthquake in Japan, 1925;
President Coolidge vetoed the Mc-
Nary-IIaugen farm relief bill,
1928; Thomas Hood boro, 1799.
May 24—First Steamship crossed At
lantic, 1819; first teley. uphic mes
sage sent, 1844; Brooklyn Bridge
opened, 1883; Empire Day first
observed in Great Britan in Mem
orial to Queen Victoria, 1904;
Queen Victoria born 1819.
May 25-Constitutional Convention
began work, 1787; Yale College
became a university, 1887; Ralph
Waldo Emerson born, 1803.
Fresh Every Day Home Growr
Snap Beam, Squash, Cabbage, Beet*
Cucumber*, English Pea*. Carrot*
etc., at MODERN GROCERY CO.
enure* of delinquency, liquor was
fifth, and that there is a little less
of all kinds of delinquency now than!
lx. r dm 1017”
RID OF BAD TASTE
Georgia Mu TcU, How He
Takes BUck-Draagkt
ffke* Bilioea.
Valdosta, Ca.—In telling how
Thcdford's Black-Draught has
helped to keep him well, Mr. O. A.
Aldrich, of this city, says: '
“Black-Draught Is a good medi
cine. I began taking it when just
s boy, tor biliousness and as a
laxative.
"Wlien I get bilious, my mouth
has a bad taste and I get dizzy,
feel light-headed. A few doses of
Black-Drought usually make me fed
like new. It seems to cleanse my
System of impurities, my head gets
dearer, and the bad taste Is gone
irom my mouth.
“I am a rather healthy, strong
man, taking very little medicine, ex
cept for the dizziness I mentioned.
“It Is good to know that there Is
a good laxative like Black-Draught
to take and give quick relief.”
Thousands of other men and wom
en find Black-Draught a great help
in relieving common aliments due
to indigestion, constipation and
biliousness.
Thedford’s Black-Draught Is pre
pared from medicinal roots and
herbs, of highest quality, finely pow
dered, carefully combined and pack
aged by automatic machinery. .
Easy to take—no disagreeable
"ftcr-effect*. Price 25 bents. w.jj9
BLACK-DRAUGHT
o ne Thimbleful-
*?Aj>Ay's FEED
Fori One Chick | ;
lHINK OF IT! One tiny thimbleful . . . all
the feed a chick can put in its little crop in one
day. On this tiny bit it roust live .. . grow . ..
build bones . . . build muscles .. . start feath
ers. Think of the job feed has to do I
They must depend on feed for so many things!
They get them all in Purina Chick Startcna
(mash) or Purina All-Mash Startcna Chow ...
12 different ingredients in every thimbleful.
Cod-liver oil . . . dried buttermilk . . . alfalfa
flour... granulated meat... these and eight
others arc there!
These 12 ingredients ... think how carefully they
be mixed to make every thimbleful alike. Purina
Startcna and All-Mash Startcna Chow arc mixed over
again ... 960 times just to be thorough 1 You
c weeks old ... and with Purina Gro
and Purina Intermediate Hen Chow (scratch) ... to be
fed from then on until the pullets arc laying at 16 weeks.
How little feed a chick eats ... just one thimbleful
. . , yet how important it is ... how much depends
very life ... its growth . .. what
t fall and winter when eggs
• to be worth good money. You can allord to
feed only the best... Purina Poultry Chows.
TODAY, AS
FOR YEARS
Ask for a Copy of Buick's
Owner Service Policy
Th« complete
•arvica, indudi
Touring and Ch
booklet from
by writing direct to fetich
Flint. Michigan.
WHEN BETTE R
a cepy of this interesting
BUICK
DEDICATES ITSELF
TO THIS BASIC
SERVICE
POLICY. .
"Satisfy the customer." This hos boon the service policy of the Buick
Motor Company throughout the twenty-seven years of its history.
And so faithfully hos Buick followed this policy that today the familiar
emblem of Authorized Buick Service means prompt, efficient and
courteous maintenance to more than 1,500,000 Cuick owners. Buick
has twice os many owners as any other company selling cars
priced above $1200.
Here ore a few of the many important points of Buick'* Service Policy:
More than 4,000 factory-supervised Service Stations assure
all Buick owners the same fine standard of skilled Buick ;«rvice.
A written Warranty, covering the first 4,000 miles or the first
90 days of ownership, whichever shall accrue first, guarantees
every new Buick car to be free from defects in material or
workmanship.
Should parts or workmanship prove defective at ony time during
the Warranty period, Buick dealers will supply the parts and
perform the necessary labor free of charge.
In addition to coreful pre-delivery tests, the Buick owner receives
two major inspections without cost—one after 500 miles and
another after 1500 miles of driving. These include a thorough
road test of all elements of performance.
The Tourist and Change of Residence" clauses permit the Buick
owner to change his residence as frequently as he desires or
to tour any part of the U. S. or Conada and still receive the
full Warranty benefits from the nearest authorized Buick dealer.
ALL BUICK dealers fulfill these provisions of BUICK'S service policy.
All dedicate themselves to the task of serving promptly, efficiently
ond courteously.
BUICK MOTOR COMPANY. FLINT, MICHIGAN
DrWiton of GMtral .Molori Suild-n at
)fl|. Corporation
Canadian Factor
McLaugMln-Buick, C
RALPH SIMMERSON
k 8 E BUILT
d Marquette Motor Car*
BUI IP THEM
BELL’S
m,” 100 New Swimming Suits
Received This Week. Men’s, Ladies’
Misses’ and Children’s
L. D. SMITH, South Wayne Grocer
Slip in a BRADLEY and out of Doors
ITS FUN TO SWIM IN A BRADLEY—WE ARE SHOWING THE SPEED
MODELS. SUN BACKS AND SWAGGER STYLES.
MEN S $5.00 to $6.50
WOMEN’S ....... $4.00 to $7.50
MiSSES $3.00 to $5.00
If You Want the Best Shop at
E. E. Bell’s